Aerospace (Feb 2022)

Thermal Vacuum Test Campaign of the EIRSAT-1 Engineering Qualification Model

  • Rachel Dunwoody,
  • Jack Reilly,
  • David Murphy,
  • Maeve Doyle,
  • Joseph Thompson,
  • Gabriel Finneran,
  • Lána Salmon,
  • Conor O’Toole,
  • Sai Krishna Reddy Akarapu,
  • Jessica Erkal,
  • Joseph Mangan,
  • Fergal Marshall,
  • Eoghan Somers,
  • Sarah Walsh,
  • Daithí de Faoite,
  • Mike Hibbett,
  • David Palma,
  • Loris Franchi,
  • Lily Ha,
  • Lorraine Hanlon,
  • David McKeown,
  • William O’Connor,
  • Alexey Uliyanov,
  • Ronan Wall,
  • Brian Shortt,
  • Sheila McBreen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/aerospace9020099
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 2
p. 99

Abstract

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CubeSats facilitate rapid development and deployment of missions for educational, technology demonstration, and scientific purposes. However, they are subject to a high failure rate, with a leading cause being the lack of system-level verification. The Educational Irish Research Satellite (EIRSAT-1) is a CubeSat mission under development in the European Space Agency’s (ESA) Fly Your Satellite! Programme. EIRSAT-1 is a 2U CubeSat with three novel payloads and a bespoke antenna deployment module, which all contribute to the complexity of the project. To increase the likelihood of mission success, a prototype model philosophy is being employed, where both an engineering qualification model (EQM) and a flight model of EIRSAT-1 are being built. Following the assembly of the EQM, the spacecraft underwent a successful full functional test and month-long mission test. An environmental test campaign in ESA Education Office’s CubeSat Support Facility was then conducted with the EQM where both vibration and thermal verification test campaigns were performed. The focus of this paper is the thermal testing and verification of the EIRSAT-1 EQM. Over three weeks, the EQM was subjected to one non-operational cycle, three and a half operational cycles, and a thermal balance test in a thermal vacuum chamber. After dwelling at each temperature extreme, functional tests were performed to investigate the performance of the spacecraft in this space representative environment. The approach to planning and executing the thermal testing is described in detail including the documentation required, set up of the test equipment, and determination of the test levels. Overall, the campaign demonstrated that the mission can successfully operate in a space environment similar to that expected in orbit, despite encountering a number of issues. These issues included a payload displaying anomalous behaviour at cold temperatures and needing to redefine test levels due to an insufficient understanding of the internal dissipation in the spacecraft. A total of two major and three minor non-conformances were raised. Crucially, these issues could not have been found without thermal testing, despite the comprehensive ambient tests performed. The main results and lessons learned during this thermal test campaign are presented with the aim of guiding future missions on optimal approaches in organising and executing the thermal testing of their CubeSats.

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